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Motherboards

MSI Z87-G43 (LGA 1150) Motherboard Review

Overclocking


msi_g43_oc_v2

I found that overclocking on the MSI Z87-G43 was a little under what I’ve seen from higher end motherboards – possibly due to a lack of load line stability? I’ve seen our chip reach 4.9/5GHz before and sadly the MSI Z87-G43 only seemed to be capable of 4.7GHz – but that’s still a great overclock and more than most would be able to get. The main thing with Haswell is that your overclocks are largely dictated by the quality of your chip, the variantions between most motherboards are very small. I think the slightly lower OC achieved is because I am not used to MSI’s BIOS style and what options do what, with further tweaking or custom OC profiles getting higher overclocks would be possible. I didn’t really want to go much higher on the voltage side though as 1.375 volts delivers temperatures in the mid 90s, even on a Corsair H100i working its a$$ off.

Overclocked Performance and Power

MSI Z87-G43_OC_1

MSI Z87-G43_OC_2

MSI Z87-G43_OC_3

MSI Z87-G43_OC_4

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7 Comments

  1. Everybody (well almost everybody) would rather have top of the range mobo’s, smartphones, GFX cards etc. but products like these are the volume sellers. Without products like this, companies wouldn’t exist. If I had to pay for my computer stuff, this would be the kind of board I’d buy. There’s nothing wrong with it.

    1. So true, I’m actually seriously considering this. The run-of-the-mill boards are what makes a manufacturer’s success. Sure we’d all love to get all the shenanigans, but money is not growing on trees yet, so we make do.

  2. “Built around MSI’s tried-and-tested Military Class 4 components” What a joke this is, there is no ML STD anymore and there sure isn’t any “class 4” The electronics manufacturing world follows IPC standards. Military falls under class 3 requirements. “Whereas Class 3 products demand continued high performance or performance-on-demand is critical and equipment downtime cannot be tolerated, the end use environment may be uncommonly harsh, and the equipment must function when required, such as life support or other critical systems” I am a certified IPC specialist, and can tell you that it does likely meet the class 3 military spec, BUT so does almost every other manufacturer. I wish guys doing reviews would start to take note of this “class 4” BS. It’s false and should be noted.

    1. I appreciate your feedback. I’d be interested to read more and question our MSI representatives on it. Could you provide the relative links to the IPC standard descriptions?

      1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPC_(electronics) best I can do, I cant find any free link that details the standards. basically class 1 is it just has to work, class 2 is where continued performance and extended life are required and for which uninterrupted service is desired, but not critical. I already posted class 3. Here you can see the IPC cert on MSI’s web page. http://www.msi.com/html/product/ipc/DMS/index.html Click manufacture tab and bottom of page.

          1. expert, can you provide us with the criteria and source for a military class 4 designation ? It seems made up 🙂

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